"SYL" 2005 Obituary

SYLANDER o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-01-21 published
GLOCKLING,
Elma
Peacefully, on Wednesday, January 19, 2005, at the age of 86.
Beloved wife of the late Bob
GLOCKLING. Dear mother of Pamela
(David VUCKSON,) and the late Claudia
FOOTE.
Proud grandma of
Deanna (Peter
FORMANEK,) and Rob
FOOTE
(Tara.)
Great-grandmother
of Jonathan and Jeffrey. Sister of Ruth
DEAN, and Helen
SYLANDER
(Nanaimo, British Columbia). Friends will be received at the
Neweduk Funeral Home - "Mississauga Chapel," 1981 Dundas St.
W. (1 block east of Erin Mills Pkwy.), from 1 - 2 p.m. on Sunday,
January 23, 2005. A Memorial Service will follow in the Chapel
at 2 p.m. A private interment of cremated remains will take place
at Glen Oaks Memorial Gardens. If desired, remembrances may be
made to the Heart and Stroke Foundation or the charity of choice.
Neweduk Funeral Home 905-828-8000

SYLPH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-06-07 published
SYLPH,
Constance (née
GOBIN)
On June 4, 2005 Constance, age 73, died peacefully from cancer
at the Hospice Care, Exeter, England surrounded by family and
Friends.
Dear wife of the late James
SYLPH, loving sister to Marjorie
CROWN and loving mother of stepson James
SYLPH and his wife,
Esther EWING and Grandmother to Breffney and Caitlin
MacKAYLoving mother-in-law to Barbara
MOFFAT of Niagara on the Lake
Honorary Grandmother and Auntie to family in Canada, the U.S.
and throughout the United Kingdom.
The funeral service will take place at St Paul's Chapel, the
Crematorium Exeter on June 8, 2005 at 10.30 am. A celebration
of her life will be held in the Residents Lounge, Pegasus Court,
Heavitree, Exeter on June 8, 2005 at noon.
Family flowers only please. Donations in Constance's memory may
be made to Hospice Care, c/o Mitchell Funeral Services, King
William Street, Exeter, Devon EX4 6PD, United Kingdom. Sincere
thanks to all the staff at the Hospice for their care and support.

SYLVA o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-02-16 published
BROCK,
Joseph "
Howard"
Peacefully, at home, surrounded by his family, on Tuesday, February
15, 2005, Joseph "Howard"
BROCK in his 64th year. Beloved husband
of Helen (MANNING)
BROCK. Dear father of Sascha, Derek, Kathy
and Meg. Brother of Edward
BROCK
(Mary,) and Julie
SYLVA of London,
and Donna BROSNAN
(Dave) of Saint Thomas. Visitors will be received
on Thursday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m at the O'Neil Funeral Home,
350 William Street. Funeral Mass in St. Peter's Basilica, 196
Dufferin Avenue, on Friday at 10 a.m. Interment St. Peter's Cemetery.

SYLVAIN o@ca.on.kent_county.wallaceburg.wallaceburg_courier_press 2005-02-23 published
SCAFURI,
MariaDella (née
MYERS)
Mrs. Maria Della Scafuri a resident of Wallaceburg passed away
on Friday, February 18, 2005 at the Chatham Kent Health Alliance
"SydenhamCampus," in Wallaceburg, at the age of 90. Mrs.
SCAFURI
was born in Dover Twp. and was a daughter of the late William
and Valery
(EMERY)
MYERS.
Della had resided in Detroit, Michigan
for many years returning to the Wallaceburg area two years ago.
Beloved wife of the late Joseph
SCAFURI.
Loving mother of the
late Allen
SCAFURI. Dear sister of Buelah
HOWLETT and Lorraine
TREPANIER.
Predeceased by two brothers Don
MYERS and Bernard
MYERS and six sisters Edna
SYLVAIN, Verna
THOMAS, Viola
HIND,
Bernida STERLING,
WinnifredLABONTE and Leona
MacDONALD. The
late Mrs. SCAFURI rested at the Eric F. Nicholls Funeral Home,
639 Elgin Street, in Wallaceburg, until Monday, February 21,
2005 when the funeral service was conducted in the chapel of
the funeral home at 10: 30 a.m. with Fr. Greg
BONIN,
Officiating.
Cremation followed. Interment of ashes will take place in Woodmere
Cemetery, Detroit at a later date. As an expression of sympathy,
donations to the charity of your choice may be left at the funeral
home. As a living memorial a tree will be planted in Nicholls
MemorialForest in memory of Maria Della
SCAFURI.

SYLVAIN o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-12-03 published
SARAZIN taught art of life
By Ian GILLESPIE, Free Press Columnist, Sat, December 3, 2005
The obituary says Barry
SARAZIN taught radio broadcasting at
Fanshawe College. But with all due respect, I think they got
that a bit wrong.
SARAZIN died Tuesday at Parkwood Hospital after a six-year battle
with prostate cancer. He left a wife, two children and two grandchildren.
He was 58 years old.
SARAZIN's radio career started in Blind River, then bounced him
through studios in Sault Ste. Marie, Ottawa, Smiths Falls and
Oshawa. He had the requisite "radio voice" -- that perfectly
modulated tone that, when it's done well, can flow from a plastic
box and into your head like a lover's whisper.
Some radio guys have that -- and sometimes, that's enough. But
SARAZIN had something more.
In 1973, he landed at Fanshawe College in the communication arts
program. Five years later, he helped launch the college station
CIXX-FM -- popularly known as 6X-FM. It was the first time an
FM licence had been granted to a Canadian college.
He taught at Fanshawe for 28 years, for a while taking the role
of program co-ordinator. Along the way, he handled the weekend
morning duties on
CFPL-AM 980 -- an aspect that added a real-life
edge of experience to his classroom sessions.
Bob COLLINS, co-ordinator of broadcast programs at Fanshawe College,
figures SARAZIN taught more than 1,300 students during those
years.
After SARAZIN was diagnosed with cancer in 1999, he accepted
a reduced workload. Although it sounds as if there was nothing
"reduced" about the impact he had.
"I know he was standing in front of the class and suffering,"
says COLLINS. "
But he was still committed to delivering a quality
education. You just had to watch the man to see how he set the
tone for his life. It was admirable."
Glynis TUCKER was one of
SARAZIN's students. Today,
TUCKER handles
corporate communications for London's city hall. But 17 years
ago, she was a cocky college student who got one of
SARAZIN's
famous "blue letters" -- a typewritten disciplinary note delivered
in a blue envelope.
"He was like a captain," she says, adding he often spoke of his
love of sailing. "He was the captain of his ship, the captain
of the program and the captain of his life."
BOB-FM announcer Skye
SYLVAIN, who studied at Fanshawe in the
late '80s, remembers
SARAZIN as a man with "an elegant demeanour"
who taught his students about radio, yes -- but something else,
too.
"He was trying to offer us everything he'd experienced and funnel
it back to us in a way that would help us navigate whatever perils
we'd face," says
SYLVAIN.
Deborah O'GRADY works as an announcer at
BOB-FM and a human resources
representative at a local medical lab. She remembers
SARAZIN
as a formal, reserved but passionate man who was known to sport
an ascot at social events.
"He was very much a father figure to us, and some people rebelled
against that," says
O'GRADY, who studied with
SARAZIN 20 years
ago. "But then two or three years out of college, we realized,
wait a second -- Barry knew what he was talking about."
O'GRADY recalls the day
SARAZIN spent an hour teaching students
how to budget their time and money.
O'GRADY says "we all sort
of groaned" because they didn't think they needed to know that
stuff.
But of course, they did.
Brad GIBB is music director at FM-96. He remembers
SARAZIN as
a "well-mannered, proper guy" who'd remove his eyeglasses, wave
them in the air and breathe in through his teeth before he told
you what you'd done wrong.
"It sounds really cliched, but he really was an inspiration,"
says GIBB. "And not just how to be a good worker in the broadcast
business, but to be a good person in general."
In an e-mail, longtime Fanshawe co-worker Ray
WILMOT recalls
the day SARAZIN told him about the cancer that would ultimately
take his life.
"There was I, sitting across from him at a picnic table on the
grass outside the cafeteria, crying," writes
WILMOT. "And there
was Barry, reaching over to grip my forearm, comforting me."
Like I said, the obituary stated
SARAZIN taught broadcasting.
But it sounds as if he taught people a bit more than that.

SYLVAN o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-12-07 published
DALY,
ReverendRoyA. (1948-2005)
Born in Montserrat, West Indies, he died suddenly at Kitchener-Waterloo
Health Centre of Grand River Hospital, on Thursday, December
1, 2005. Loving and beloved husband of Joan
OSBORNE.
Brother
of Elaine RINU, Doris
WEEKES, Ida
SYLVAN (deceased), Flora
JEFFERS,
Arnold DALEY, Raymond
DALEY, Louella
DALY-
FARAGE, Judith
DALEY
and Verene
DALEY.
Father to Sarah
DALY. Uncle to many. Cousin
and friend to many. Special friend of the Osborne family. Friends
are invited to share their memories of Reverend
DALY with his family
at the Edward R. Good Funeral Home, 171 King St. S., Waterloo
on Friday, December 9, from 5-7 p.m. The funeral service to celebrate
Rev. DALY's life and faith will be held at St. George's of Forest
Hill Anglican Church, 321 Fischer Hallman Rd. E., Kitchener,
on Saturday, December 10, 2005 at 11 a.m. with Father Don
DAVIDSON
officiating. Interment in Williamsburg Cemetery, Fischer-Hallman
Rd. In Reverend
DALY's memory, and in lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to the St. George's of Forest Hill Organ Fund and
may be arranged through the funeral home. "Thy will Oh Lord,
Not Mine" Condolences and Donations www.edwardrgood.com 519-745-8445

SYLVEST o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2005-04-04 published
SYLVEST,
FlorenceIsobel (née
BROWN)
Gone to be with her Lord and Saviour, Florence Isobel
SYLVEST
(née BROWN,) of Owen Sound, formerly of R.R.#1, Shallow Lake,
passed away peacefully, with her family by her side, on Saturday,
April 2nd, 2005 at the Grey Bruce Health Services, in Owen Sound.
She was in her 86th year. Dearly beloved wife of the late Oakley
John SYLVEST.
Loved mother of Cecilia
JOHNSON and her husband,
Len, of Meaford, Victor
SYLVEST and his wife, Frieda and Russell
SYLVEST and his wife, Betty, both of Shallow Lake, Sylvia
GREIG
and her husband, Jack, of Port Elgin, Mardonna
WISMER and her
husband, Mike, of Southampton, Larry
SYLVEST and his wife, Florence
and Bradley
SYLVEST and his friend, Charlene, both of Wiarton.,
Adrean WEBB and her husband, Paul and Raymond
SYLVEST and his
wife, Bonnie, both of Owen Sound, and Jim
SYLVEST, of Allenford.
Very proud grandma of forty-one grandchildren, sixty-four great-grandchildren
and ten great-great-grandchildren. Florence will be sadly missed
by one brother, Russell
GRAVES and one sister, Gwen
WISMER and
her husband, Harry, both of Owen Sound. Predeceased by her parents,
Frederick and Maggie
BROWN and her son, Rodney
SYLVEST.
Friends
may call at the Brian E. Wood Funeral Home, 250 14th Street West,
Owen Sound (376-7492), on Tuesday evening from 7: 00 to 9:00 p.m.
A Funeral Service for Florence
SYLVEST will be held at the Rockcliffe
Gospel Temple, 10 4th Avenue Southwest, Owen Sound, on Wednesday,
April 6th, 2005 at 11: 00 a.m., with Reverend Brian
JASPER officiating.
Interment in Greenwood Cemetery. If so desired, the family would
appreciate donations to the Heart and Stroke Foundation or the
Rockcliffe Gospel Temple Building Fund, as your expression of
sympathy.
Page A2

SYLVESTER o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-06-05 published
WURM,
GraceEmmeline
(WILLERT)
At Queensway Nursing Home, Hensall on Friday, June 3, 2005 Grace
Emmeline (WILLERT)
WURM formerly of Exeter in her 85th year.
Beloved wife of the late Edgar
WURM (1991.) Dear mother of Shirley
JEFFREY and her companion Glen
SKEA of Courtice. Dear grandmother
of Craig and Megan
SYLVESTER of Mooresville, Indiana and Crystal
and Don WATTS of Morinville, Alberta. Dear sister-in-law of Edith
CAMPBELL of Exeter, Margaret and Ken
BAKER of Dashwood, Gerald
and Cora WURM of Exeter and Clarence and Lois
WURM of March Predeceased
by sisters Jean
WALPER and Reta
SLEZAK and a brother Roy
WILLERT.
Friends may call at the Hopper Hockey Funeral Home, 370 William
Street, 1 west of Main, Exeter on Monday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. where
the funeral service will be held on Tuesday, June 7th at 1: 30
p.m. with Reverend John
TREMBULAK III officiating. Interment Exeter
Cemetery. Donations to the Heart and Stroke Foundation or the
charity of your choice would be appreciated by the family. Condolences
may be forwarded through www.hopperhockeyfh.com

SYLVESTER o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-10-08 published
Mother remembers
ROSS as an inspiration to others
Hundreds gather in a Toronto synagogue to say goodbye to the
slain 25-year-old.
By Tara BRAUTIGAM, Canadian Press, Sat., October 8, 2005
Toronto -- Friends, family members and strangers moved by the
tragic death of Alicia
ROSS came together yesterday to remember
the slain 25-year-old as a bright, bubbly and generous person
with the power to touch the lives of nearly everyone she met.
More than 500 people jammed into a Toronto synagogue to show
their sympathy and lend moral support as
ROSS's adoptive mother,
Sharon FORTIS, tearfully described a little girl who grew into
a loving, caring and compassionate daughter.
"She was an adorable baby, a precocious toddler, a blossoming
preteen and a terrible, terrible teenager," Fortis said during
a poignant and emotional eulogy that was marked with equal parts
humour and tears.
"Goodnight, our love, our dove."
ROSS's remains were discovered in two different wooded areas
northeast of Toronto late last month, five weeks after she vanished
without a trace from outside the home she shared with her family
in the north Toronto suburb of Markham.
Daniel SYLVESTER, a 31-year-old next-door neighbour who turned
himself in to police September 21, faces a charge of second-degree
murder.
As she spoke, the diminutive
FORTIS reminisced about how
ROSS
loved the outdoors, strumming her guitar and watching the popular
reality television show The Amazing Race with her mom, "always
saying, 'We could do that.' "
She also spoke of the impression
ROSS left with people during
a life she described as brief but full, citing as an example
the time her daughter helped to encourage a grateful co-worker
who was struggling through a bout of depression.
FORTIS thanked
ROSS's
Friends -- "pillars of strength," she called
them -- as well as the media, the community and York Region police,
whom she referred to as her "Linus blanket throughout this ordeal"
for their help in the search for her missing daughter.
It wasn't until
SYLVESTER contacted police that
ROSS's body was
recovered from two locations: wooded areas near Manilla, northeast
of Toronto, and Coboconk, where the
SYLVESTER family kept a weekend
retreat.

SYLVESTER o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-03-01 published
BUCEK,
Gertrude▼Anna▼ "
Trude▼"
peacefully at Leisureworld Scarboro, just before dawn on Saturday,
February 26, 2005 in her 91st year.
Mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, talented homemaker, gardener,
arts enthusiast, antique collector and hostess extraordinaire,
she went silently and very gently into that good night. Born
in Vienna in the early months of World War I, she lived in Austria
and former Czechoslovakia until she emigrated to Canada in 1951
with her husband and four (soon to be five) young daughters.
From her mother, Matilde
BOUKAL, an opera singer, and her father
Richard WALDEK, owner of the Grand Hotel Waldek in Pilsen, she
interited a love of opera and a remarkable sense of style. Friends
and family have witnessed with sadness more than a decade of
dramatically declining health. Her daughters are very grateful
to caregivers Francine
BARIT and more recently Brenda
SYLVESTER
together with the dedicated staff of the 6th floor at Leisureworld
Scarboro.
Predeceased in 2002 by her husband of 63 years, Jaro, she is
remembered with love by her daughters Olga
KORPER
(Leo▼MEYER,)
Sylvia BUCEK, Trude
MEYER (Wolfgang), Mimi
MARROCCO (Frank),
and Hélène
BUCEK-
MacKEY (Ernie). Beloved "Babi" to Sasha
KORPER
(Gregory Axelson), Kim
MEYER-
CECH (Alexander), Marc
SELLITTO,
Lillian MEYER-
JANZEK (Andreas), Emily
MARROCCO (Michael
CONDOYANNIS),
Phillip MEYER, Rachel
DAVIES (Rob), Angela
MARROCCO and Ted
MARROCCO.
Great-grandmother of Taiga, Kirin, Jackson and Matthew. Visitation
on Wednesday, March 2, 7: 00 - 9:00 p.m. at McDougall And Brown
Funeral Home, 2900 Kingston Road (east of Brimley). Funeral Mass
will be celebration on Thursday, March 3 at 10: 30 a.m. at St.
Basil's Church, 50 St. Joseph Street (corner of Bay Street, one
block north of Wellesley). Donations in her memory to the Canadian
Opera Company or to the University of St. Michael's College (81
Saint Mary Street, Toronto M5S 1J4) would be appreciated.

SYLVESTER o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-09-22 published
Neighbours are relieved arrest made
Police find human remains 100 kilometres from where Alicia
ROSS
was last seen
By Unnati GANDHI and Timothy
APPLEBY,
With a report from Oliver
MOORE,
Thursday,September 22, 2005, Page A17
Sitting around the kitchen table, four Friends of Alicia
ROSS's
family tried to calm their nerves with a cup of tea yesterday
afternoon. They couldn't bear to be outside where lines of police
tape surrounded the neighbouring home of 31-year-old Daniel
SYLVESTER,
who surrendered to police and is charged with second-degree murder.
"Why didn't he do it earlier?" asked Benny
ARONOWITZ, who lives
on Green Lane. "The family had to suffer so much."
One of Mr.
ARONOWITZ's Friends, Nina
REZMOVITZ, said her son,
David, and Ms.
ROSS were good Friends.
"We're all parents, and this is the worst thing that could happen
to any of us," she said. "David and his girlfriend scoured the
ravine for hours. He was so distraught."
Ms. ROSS, 25, was last seen by her boyfriend, Sean
HINE, just
after midnight on August 17 at the home where she lived with
her parents. Police described Mr.
HINE as a person of interest,
but yesterday her next-door neighbour turned himself in.
Hours later, police discovered human remains in two locations.
They said they're confident the remains are those of Ms.
ROSS.
Ontario's chief coroner confirmed the remains were found near
the town of Manilla, about 50 kilometres northeast of Markham,
and near the town of Coboconk, another 40 kilometres north.
Bronte Road, the tree-lined street where the victim lived, was
quiet yesterday except for the forensic investigators who were
scouring the house next door, a home listed as belonging to Grant
SYLVESTER since 1997. The best-selling author died in 1999.
His widow, Olga Mary, and son Daniel continued to live in the
family home. The couple's other son, Robert, had moved to Mississauga.
Although Daniel
SYLVESTER lived in the neighbourhood, he seems
to have left little impression. Shown his photo, numerous local
residents said they had never seen him. Two women who lived within
100 metres of the
SYLVESTER home said working suburbanites invariably
go from their car to their house, barely saying hello to any
but the closest neighbours.
"I don't know the name of the person across the street," said
Angela TORTI, who moved to the area 22 years ago when it was
a new subdivision.
None of the neighbours lingering around the cordoned-off area
claimed to have seen any of the
SYLVESTERs much.
"Everybody today kind of goes their own way. When you have small
children, you go out walking with them and you get to know your
neighbours," Ms.
REZMOVITZ said. "But once your kids are grown,
often you don't know who your neighbours are."
Calls to the
SYLVESTER home and
to Robert's home, office and
cottage were not answered.
Next door to the
SYLVESTER residence, two posters with Ms.
ROSS's
photo were still taped to the back windows of an sport utility
vehicle. A couple arrived to visit Ms.
ROSS's family during the
afternoon, but declined to comment afterward.
Around dinnertime, a police officer prevented a teenage girl
from entering blocked-off Bronte Road. She left a plastic-wrapped
bouquet at the barricade and lit a small candle.
Although some residents said they were shocked to hear that a
neighbour had been arrested, they said they were nevertheless
relieved.
"It's devastating to hear. It shows some degree of a conscience,
turning himself in, but it's like humanizing a monster. This
can't redeem him," said Marc
FINKELSTEIN, who was jogging with
his wife, Simone. "This has paralyzed the neighbourhood. It used
to be such an active neighbourhood. It's nice to know all this
is finally over."
Ms. TORTI said she had been unable to stop worrying about her
daughter, who is living at home while studying at the University
of Toronto.
"I don't go to sleep until she's in," she said. "She's 23, but
honest to God, I don't go to sleep."
About 100 kilometres northeast of the neighbourhood, human remains
that York Regional Police say likely belong to Ms.
ROSS, were
discovered.
Helicopters whirled overhead, police and Ontario Provincial Police
tracker dogs scoured the bush and thick bull rushes over a wide
area north and south of Highway 7. But the focal point of the
search appeared to be just south of the town of Manilla bisected
by Highway 7.
Near the intersection of Simcoe Street and the Seventh Concession,
police tape surrounded a rectangle of thick, damp brush less
than three metres from the roadside. Under a broiling sun, police
with weed whackers cut thick grass and carried it to a York Regional
Police forensic truck.
An officer said his colleagues had been there since early morning.
The seven-hectare (28-acre) property has been for sale since
the beginning of the month, with an asking price of $139,900
and nobody was more surprised to see the flurry of activity than
listing agent Audrey
GRIFFIOEN.
"This is terrible, I can't believe it," she said, explaining
that the property -- partly farm land and partly environmentally
protected -- had recently had a conditional purchase offer.
"He's got to be a real sicko, the guy who did this," she said.
"Killing is bad enough, but hacking up and spreading body parts
all over the countryside.... I'll bet you he just stopped in
his car and chucked it."
Also dismayed was 23-year-old Melissa
NEWBERRY, whose parents
own an 11-hectare (43-acre) parcel of dense brush just north
of Highway 7, where more searching was under way.
"It's kind of scary," she said, recounting a recent incident
in which she was jogging along the road. She said "some creepo
in a yellow car," whom she described as a blond-haired man about
30 years old, appeared to be watching her.
She was advised to report the encounter to one of the numerous
police officers in the area.

SYLVESTER o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-03-01 published
BUCEK,
Gertrude▲Anna▲ "
Trude▲"
Peacefully at Leisureworld Scarborough, just before dawn on Saturday,
February 26, 2005, in her 91st year. Mother, grandmother, great-grandmother,
talented homemaker, gardener, arts enthusiast, antique collector
and hostess extraordinaire, she went silently and very gently
into that good night. Born in Vienna in the early months of World
War 1, she lived in Austria and former Czechoslovakia until she
emigrated to Canada in 1951 with her husband and four (soon to
be five) young daughters. From her mother, Matilde
BOUKAL, an
opera singer, and her father Richard
WALDEK, owner of the Grand
Hotel Waldek in Pilsen, she inherited a love of opera and a remarkable
sense of style. Friends and family have witnessed with sadness
more than a decade of dramatically declining health. Her daughters
are very grateful to caregivers Francine
BARIT and more recently
Brenda SYLVESTER, together with the dedicated staff of the 6th
floor at Leisureworld Scarborough. Predeceased in 2002 by her
husband of 63 years, Jaro, she is remembered with love by her
daughters Olga
KORPER
(Leo▲MEYER,) Sylvia
BUCEK, Trude
MEYER
(Wolfgang,) Mimi
MARROCCO
(Frank,) and Hélène
BUCEK-
MacKEY (Ernie.)
Beloved "Babi" to Sasha
KORPER (Gregory
AXELSON), Kim
MEYER-
CECH
(Alexander), Marc
SELLITTO, Lilian
MEYER-
JANZEK (Andreas), Emily
MARROCCO (Michael
CONDOYANNIS), Phillip
MEYER, Rachel
DAVIES
(Rob,) Angela
MARROCCO and Ted
MARROCCO.
Great-grandmother of
Taiga, Kirin, Jackson and Matthew. Visitation on Wednesday, March
2, 7: 00-9:00 p.m. at McDougall And Brown Funeral Home, 2900 Kingston
Road (east of Brimley). Funeral Mass will be celebrated on Thursday,
March 3 at 10: 30 a.m at St. Basil's Church, 50 St. Joseph Street
(corner of Bay Street, one block north of Wellesley). Donations
in her memory to the Canadian Opera Company or to the University
of St. Michael's College (81 Saint Mary Street, Toronto, M5S 1J4)
would be greatly appreciated.

SYLVESTER o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-03-17 published
SYLVESTER,
AlvinLee
Formerly of Pickering. Died peacefully, at Fairview Lodge, on
Tuesday, March 15, 2005. He will be lovingly remembered by family
and Friends. The family will receive Friends at the McEachnie
Funeral Home, 28 Old Kingston Road, Ajax (Pickering Village)
on Thursday, March 17 from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Funeral Service to
be held in the Chapel Friday, March 16 at 1: 30 p.m.

SYLVESTER o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-10-15 published
RENWICK,
FlorenceMay (née
McCULLY)
Passed away peacefully, at Sunnybrook Hospital, on Tuesday, October
11, 2005 at the age of 87. Beloved wife of the late Sylvester
(Ace) RENWICK. Dear mother of Laurie Joseph
SYLVESTER and Michelle
(Philip C.
WILSON.)
Predeceased by brothers: Ira Eaton, Cecil
Rhodes, Joseph Howe, Hugh Wilson, James Lester, Wendell, and
Laurie. Also sisters: Eva Ruth, Ethel Isobel, Jean Delores and
Jessie. She will be missed by her extended family in Nova Scotia,
British Columbia, and throughout Ontario. Friends and family
will be welcome at the interment, located at Pine Hills Cemetery
on St. Clair Ave. East and Birchmount Rd., on October 22, 2005
at 1: 30 p.m. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations to the Sunnybrook
Hospital would be appreciated.